Transcript Document

The Age of Jackson
Andrew Jackson’s policies speak for common
people but violate Native American rights.
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Expanding Democracy Changes Politics
Tension Between Adams and Jackson
• In 1824, Andrew Jackson wins popular but not
electoral vote
• John Quincy Adams elected president by House
with Clay’s support
• Jacksonian’s claim Adams, Clay have struck a
corrupt bargain
• Jacksonian’s form Democratic-Republican Party,
block Adams’s policies
Democracy and Citizenship
• Most states ease voting qualifications; few require
property
• In 1828, numerous new voters help Jackson win
presidency
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Jackson’s New Presidential Style
Jackson’s Appeal to the Common Citizen
• Jackson claims he is of humble origins, though in
reality is wealthy
- says Adams is intellectual elitist
• Jackson wins 1828 presidential election by
landslide
Jackson’s Spoils System
• Jackson limits appointees to federal jobs to four-year
terms
• Uses spoils system—replaces former appointees
with own friends
• Friends become primary advisers, dubbed “kitchen
cabinet”
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Removal of Native Americans
Indian Removal Act of 1830
• Whites want to displace or assimilate Native
Americans
• Jackson: only solution is to move Native Americans
off their land
- thinks assimilation cannot work
- too many troops needed to keep whites out of
native lands
• Congress passes Indian Removal Act of 1830
- funds treaties that force Native Americans west
• Jackson pressures some tribes to move, forcibly
removes others
Continued . . .
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Removal of Native Americans
The Cherokee Fight Back
• Worcester v. Georgia—state cannot rule Cherokee or
invade their land
• Some Cherokee try to continue court fight, minority
favor relocation
• Federal agents sign treaty with minority; relocation
begins
• By 1838, 20,000 remain; President Martin Van Buren
orders removal
The Trail of Tears
• Cherokee sent west on Trail of Tears; 800-mile trip
made on foot
• Cherokee are robbed by government officials,
outlaws; thousands die
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States’ Rights and the
National Bank
Andrew Jackson confronts two important issues
during his presidency—states’ rights and a
national bank.
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A Tariff Raises the States’ Rights Issue
The Nullification Theory
• British try to flood U.S. with cheap goods; tariff
raised 1824, 1828
• Vice-president John C. Calhoun calls 1828 tariff;
Tariff of Abominations
• Thinks South pays for North’s prosperity; cotton
prices low
• Calhoun devises nullification theory:
- questions legality of applying federal laws to states
- Constitution based on compact among states
- state can reject law it considers unconstitutional
- states have right to leave Union if nullification
denied
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A Tariff Raises the States’ Rights Issue
Hayne and Webster Debate States’ Rights
• Senator Robert Hayne argues Southern view of tariff,
states’ rights
• Senator Daniel Webster of Mass. defends Union
• Jackson believes Union “must be preserved”;
Calhoun resigns
South Carolina Rebels
• South Carolina declares 1828, 1832 tariffs null;
threatens to secede
• Congress passes Force Bill: can use army, navy
against S. Carolina
• Henry Clay proposes tariff that lowers duties over 10
years
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Jackson Attacks the National Bank
Jackson Opposes the Bank
• Jackson vetoes bill to re-charter Second
Bank of the United States
• Presents bank as privileged institution that favors the
wealthy
Pet Banks
• Jackson puts federal money in state banks loyal to
Democratic Party
Whig Party Forms
• People unhappy with Jackson form Whig Party,
back American System
Van Buren Deals with Jackson’s Legacy
Jackson’s Legacy
• Martin Van Buren wins 1836 election with Jackson’s
support
• Pet banks print bank notes in excess of gold, silver they
have
• Gov’t demands specie (gold, silver) to pay for public
lands
• Rush to exchange paper money for specie; banks stop
taking paper
• Panic of 1837-bank closings, collapse of credit system:
- people lose savings, businesses bankrupted
- more than a third of population out of work
• Van Buren tries unsuccessfully to solve economic
problems
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Van Buren Deals with Jackson’s Legacy
Harrison and Tyler
• Whig William Henry Harrison beats Van Buren in
1840 election
• Harrison enacts Whig program to revitalize economy
• Dies one month later; succeeded by vice-president
John Tyler
• Tyler opposes many parts of Whig economic plan
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